By Global Times
The Group of Seven (G7) summit ended on Sunday. After the meeting, the countries issued a communiqué, which openly criticized China and mentioned issues related to China’s Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Taiwan. The communiqué also mentioned opposition to “forced labor” and “unilateral attempts to change the status quo” in the East and South China Seas.
Attitudes were expressed in different degrees of tone. Some directly named China. Others made implications without calling China’s name directly, but made the country the unmistakable target. This has been the most systematic condemnation against and interference in China by major Western powers.
The US apparently dominated the attitude of its allies, like calling “for a timely, transparent, expert-led, and science-based WHO-convened Phase 2 COVID-19 Origins study, including, as recommended by the experts’ report, in China.” Almost every issue on which the US has recently attacked China has been mentioned in the communiqué. On the other hand, the language of the communiqué was somewhat softer than that when the US slandered China.
For example, much of the fiercest US rhetoric against China has been directed at issues over Xinjiang and Hong Kong, including accusations of “genocide” in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region. However, in the communiqué, it says that “we will promote our values, including by calling on China to respect human rights and fundamental freedoms, especially in relation to Xinjiang and those rights, freedoms and high degree of autonomy for Hong Kong enshrined in the Sino-British Joint Declaration and the Basic Law.”
All this reflects that the US may have the ability to drive major Western countries to form a collective tone against China, but it is unable to impose its most extreme views as the view of the G7 or the West in general. CNN reported that the seven leaders aired serious differences over how best to approach China during a session of the G7 summit, with Germany and Italy in particular, as well as European Union leaders, opposed to dealing with China in a confrontational manner. The final communiqué was clearly a product dominated by the US with compromise by all.
This should be seen as a fruitful start for the US to rally its allies against China, and it foreshadows the future of greater pressure on China’s diplomacy from the US through Western platforms. It is anticipated that the US will make more efforts to make its crackdown on China look like a Western coordinated move, and the possibility of other Western countries directly or tactfully supporting it will increase.
But China doesn’t need to be deterred by such a scenario at all. In fact, the West has mostly been “united” when it had conflicts with China in the past over ideological issues such as human rights. The US has strengthened their coordination, but it is all focused on public opinion and diplomacy, and transforming that into a unified hostile action against China remains difficult. The G7 leaders’ communiqué gave no hint of a breakthrough on this front.
This shows that the interests of the US and its allies on the issue of China are very different. The US has a strategic plan to maintain its hegemony and wants the West to bring China down together, while European countries have ideological differences with China but their economic relations with China are not only competitive but also have strategic needs for cooperation. The strategic differences between the US and Europe on China are insurmountable.
China should not have any illusions toward the US, but it must differentiate other countries from the US. Regardless of what kind of “anti-China united front” the US may present on the surface, we should all be clear that such a “united front” is weaker than it looks. The pattern is certain that the US is serious but the European countries are perfunctory to it. China has the ability to fundamentally spoil this “united front” between the US and Europe, and eventually win the tug-of-war to dissolve it.
Stepping outside of the West, it is harder for the US to establish a “united front.” It has been more of a political performance of the US to advocate international morality. For example, the US pushed the G7 countries to launch an infrastructure construction plan to counter the “Belt and Road Initiative,” but it is questionable whether it can really be carried out or achieve practical results. The US is competing with China with its Cold War mentality. But in fact, it is falling into disarray, using its weak points to compete with China’s advantages.
As long as China manages its own things well and develops normal relations with other countries, it will be able to defeat the US plot. Washington will need to work very hard to do things against their nature and those that it would not be interested in doing if it were not trying to get China into trouble, in addition to dragging or forcing its allies. Time will wear down the scheme of the US. If China is stable on its own, there is no need to push or trip it up, as the US will stumble on its own.
Global Times